14 amrs eDé1e 'MC. 2947 Monroe Avenue Rochester, N.Y. 14618 (716) 271-4000 .. ....... (..==, tt >:: : .' "'. . .":. t .q- {;; , , x -::^ 1( ,'.' ., ., {- ?i i ':" I ': " .. f; '0." , ,'; :'-l >fé.".' >.,"X ;:. h :' . . .:<;: ,/ . .r. U ' :' ; t. , . , " ' t. . ,ý ) . . . :' ^. .> 4 .: ...' -. J'-. . n: > . . .> : ';wi' .. . T> >'. q& "Z ,."'"f: dty 'Y I - -Jt " J' {; - t ::..' 'i!! -- .,<t; . <- <<;{ . ff1.' . d""' : ; r . .i: ft :;.f;.' ! , .: Ì-r. -,:,.. . ={.- >>^'- . . <" """'^ .I: ' :t., x '.: ., ><-t . ,</- > ;."ØÚ -)' 4.... .: ., ,:/ t1t.. i >- ,)fæ <<:. ...J.......:)-.I.:I. _ + Les Cabtnotlers au XVIII- s écle Musée de I Hortogerle " .ve lc-- I _ . - 'It \ i d \ I La plus noble parure du temps VACHERON + T CONSTANTIN Genève For more than two centuries we have created watches, which are precious and rare works of art. GOINGS ON ABOUT TOWN of music and resort to something close to il- lustrative drawing to get their purpose across. The result has both calligraphic and musical charm, and the show is augmented with un- usual scorings. from other collections, by such giants as Haydn, Mozart, and Brahms, as well as latter-day samplings from Gersh- win, Sousa, Porter, and Jelly Roll Morton. Through Jan. 26. (The Drawing Center, 137 Greene St. Open Mondays; open Wednesday evenings until 8.) GROUP SHows-At the PINDAR, 127 Greene St.: Paintings by galIery artists, among them a window with a woman sitting in it (her thigh is a three dimensional addition, and overhangs the street), by Harriet Glazier; an airy pat- tern of twigs against the sky, by Rita Edel- man; and a happy Spanish family gathered around the Christmas tree, b) Karen Lewis. Through Sunday, Dec. 2. (Opens daily, ex- cept Mondays, at noon.). . . THORP, 419 West Broadway: Contemporary drawings by more than twenty artists, including an apparently effortlessly drawn interior, done in ink by Richard Artschwager; a still-life by Morris Graves; a large depiction of leaping whales by David True; and a delicate. Klee-like colored drawing of architectural forms by Mira Schor. Through Dec. 29. (Opens at noon.) OTH ER GALLERI ES JOHN CHRISTIAN ANDERSON I VICTOR SCHRAGER- Elegantly made and fitted oak boxes, which open to reveal, say, a dismantled telephone laid out like a precious relic, or a scattering of found objects-a glove, a smal1 balloon, a fragment of plastic-beside a map of Boston numbered to show where the items were found I Color still-life photographs taken with a Polaroid camera so big that the sub- j ects have to be taken to it, in Cambridge, rather than the usual way Through Dec. 22. (Freidus, 158 Lafayette St., near Grand St.) HONORÉ DAUMIER (1808-79)-More than a hun- dred lithographs covering a forty-year period of the French caricaturist's career. Through Dec. 19. (Pratt Graphics Center Gallery, 160 Lexington Ave., at 30th St. Open Mondays and, except Saturdays, evenings until 7.) AL HIRSCHFELD-Recent drawings by the Times' theatrical caricaturist. Also, a dozen water- colors on Japanese Kabuki theatre. Through Jan. 5. (Feiden, 51 E. 10th St. Open Mon- days. ) REBECCA HORN-An installation, by a German artist, consisting of two stainless-steel swings rocking in what the artist calls a dialogue; a tack hammer that hits a steel ben every few seconds; and a twelve-foot vertical ther- mometer, containing ten kilos of mercury, that registers subj ects instead of tempera- tures ("Peacocks" is the lowest, "Inferno- Paradise" the top). A Henze recording plays in the background. Through Dec. 22. (Ala, 32 W. 20th St.) PHOTOGRAPHY HENRI CARTIER-BRESSON I EUGÈNE ATGET (1857- 19 2 7)- Works from his entire career as- sembled by the seventy-one-year-old photog- rapher.1 A hundred photographs, mostly of Paris parks and gardens. Through Jan. 6. (International Center of Photography, 1130 Fifth Ave., at 94th St Open Sundays.) BERNARD FAUCON-Photographs of dressed man- nequins printed by means of the Fresson-color process. Through Saturday, Dec.!. (Castelli Uptown, 4 E. 77th St.) PHILIPPE HALSMAN (1906-79) I THOMAS SCHIFF- Contact prints of portraits. I Abstract photo- graphs chiefly. Through Saturday, Dee 8. (N eikrug, 224 E. 68th St. Wednesdays through Saturdays, 1 to 6.).. fJf Hastings, 121 E 24th St., is showing thirty-four fin- ished portraits by Halsman Through Sat- urday. Dec.!. PETER HUJAR-Recent photographs of farm ani- mals Through Dec. 22. (Pfeifer, 825 Madi- son Ave., at 69th St.) ALEKSANDRAS MACIJAUSKAs-Prints documenting the practice of veterinary medicine in Lithu- ania. Through Saturday Dec. 8. (Prakapas, 19 E. 71st St. Open Tuesday evenings until 8.) ROBERT MAPPLETHORPE-Photographs dated 1970 to 1975. Through Saturday, Dec.!. (Samuel, 795 Broadway, at loth St Opens at noon) JEANNE MOUTOUSSAMY-AsHE-Photographs of the inhabitants of islands off South Carolina's coast Through Dec. 9. (The Art Salon, 24Ç E. 62nd St. Closed Saturdays.) ELIOT PORTER-Dye-transfer prints of wildlife Through Dec. 29. (Wolf, 30 W. 57th St.). fJf An exhibition of Porter's dye-transfer land- scapes has been mounted by the Metropolitan Museum. See below, under "Museums," fOt dates and times. MUSEUMS AND LIBRARIES METROPOLITAN MUSEUM, Fifth Ave. at 82nd St.- An exhibit of nearly eighty large-scale can- vases by Clyfford Still, representative of the artist's work since 1942 Through Feb. 3 . . . fJf "Greek Art of the Aegean Islands," a show of sculptures, vases, jewelry, and wal] paintings dating from the Bronze Age to the fifth century. Through Feb. 10.... fJf A dis- play of Japanese ceramics from the Tanaka- maru Collection, which is known for its tea- ceremony wares. Through Jan. 6.... fJf Re- cent acquisitions of twentieth-century art. two galleries of paintings and sculptures, and one of drawings. Some of the artists: ..<,,\lex Katz Roy Lichtenstein, Robert Murray Chry sa Yvonne J acquette. . . . fJf Sixty-five sevente nth-century Dutch and Flemish draw- ings from the Lehman Collection, including ten Rembrandts and a Rubens. Through J an 27. . . . PHOTOGRAPHY: Dye transfers by Eliot Porter. Through Jan. 20. (Open daily except Mondays. Hours: Tuesdays, 10 to 8 :45; Wednesdays through Saturdays, 10 to 4 :45 ; Sundays, lItO 4 :45.) MUSEUM OF MODERN ART, 1 I W. 53rd St.-The museum, celebrating its fiftieth anniversary has drawn on the contents of its own collec- tions for a sweeping survey of the art of the twenties Among the works: paintings by Magritte and Hopper, architectural models and domestic designs by Breuer and M ies van der Rohe, sculptures by Brancusi and Moholy- Nagy, photographs by Rodchenko and Wes- ton. Through Jan. 22.... fJf Portrayals of women by printmakers who worked at the end of the last century. Toulouse-Lautrec, Vinon, and Gauguin are included. Starts Thursday, Nov. 29. . . . fJf A show of thirty etchings done by Marc Chagall for the book "Psaumes de David." They underscore the collaborative ef- forts of the artist and his printer and pub- lisher. Through Jan. 28. (Open dally, except Wednesdays, 11 to 6, and Thursday evenings until 9.) GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM. 1071 Fifth Ave., at 89th St.-A sho'w of the works of the German sculptor Joseph Beuys. Mediums include gauze, honey, fat, and felt. One-third of the rotunda, for instance, is occupied by large nonrepresentational pieces of solid cast tal- low; in another area is a felt-draped piano. Also drawings. Through Jan. 2. (Open daily except Mondays. Hours: Tuesdays, 11 to 8, with no admission charge from 5 to 8 ; Wednesdays through Sundays. 11 to 5.) A complementary show is at Ronald Feldman, 33 E. 74th St. WHITNEY MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ART, 945 Madison Ave., at 75th St.-" Andy Warhol: Portraits of the '70s" Two views each of such person- alities as David Hockney, Truman Capote, and Liza Minnelli; three of Chairman Mao; and eight of the artist's mother. Through Jan. 27. . . . fJf A show of more than two hundred prints and illustrations by Edward Hopper. Through Dec. 9. . . . fJf Sixteen watercolors by Masami Teraoka, a California artist who uses traditional Japanese art forms to satirize modern life. One series is titled "31 Flavors Invading Japan" Through J an 6. (Open daily except Mondays. Hours: Tuesdays, [1 to 8, with no admission charge after 5; Wednesdays through Saturdays, lIto 6; Sun- days, noon to 6.) BROOKLYN MUSEUM, Eastern Parkway-"The American Renaissance 1876-1917," a show of more than three hundred obj ects by artists, architects, and craftsmen of the period. Through Dec. 30. . . . fJf i\n exhibit of prints, dra wings, and photographs of New York from the permanent collections. Among the sixty-six artists represented are Benny An- drews, Childe Hassam Isabel Bishop, and A.1- fred Stieglitz Through Jan. 6. (Open Wednesdays through Saturdays, 10 to 5; Sundays, noon to 5.) AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY, Central Park W. at 79th St -An exhibit of Colom- bian gold and pottery dating from about 100 B.C. to the fourteenth century The more